The signed deal includes returning bodies of 100 Palestinians who were killed and were kept by Israel #palhunger

If Pal prisoners will restart planning terrorist attacks from within the prisons,the agreement w/ them will be cancelled, privileges revoked

News that an agreement had been reached between the 1,600 Palestinian prisoners on hunger strike and Israeli authorities sent tremors through social media on Monday afternoon. As the hashtag #PalHunger lit up Twitter with the joyous news, the mood was dampened with reports that prisoners Thaer Halahleh and Bilal Diab, who at 77 days have be refusing food the longest, will continue their strike as their demand for immediate release was not met.

A correspondent for The Jerusalem Post tweeted the particulars of the deal, which met the prisoners’ demands for an end to solitary confinement as well as the renewal of visits by family members living in the Hamas ruled Gaza strip:

Some prisoners had demanded an immediate end to administrative detention, a form of detention that requires no charges or trial. According to reports, Israeli authorities agreed to either release any prisoner currently in administrative detention once their sentence had been fully served or to charge them. Halaheh and Diab, who are both imprisoned under these circumstances, have refused to stop their protest action unless their release is effective immediately.

A number of people expressed skepticism about the value of the deal struck with the Israeli authorities. Khader Adnan, who achieved his release from administrative detention through a 66-day hunger strike called on the strikers not to stop until Israel agreed to release them:

There have been daily protests over the last number of days to draw attention to the issue. On Sunday Hana Shalabi, a former prisoner who was released from administrative detention after a 43-day hunger strike, was spotted at a protest in Gaza. Shalabi is originally from Jenin in the West Bank but agreed to live in Gaza for a limited period as part of her release terms with Israeli authorities.

Ofir Gendelman, spokesman for the Israeli Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu, warned that any concessions made by Israel could be revoked if it was deemed that the terms had been broken on the Palestinian side: